Page 3 of 3 FirstFirst 123
Results 41 to 54 of 54

Thread: Bob Homewood Escort Sports Sedan

  1. #41
    Just out of interest Bob, the Rutherford Escort you used for part of the body on this car, why was it left hand drive?

  2. #42
    Quote Originally Posted by Steve Holmes View Post
    Just out of interest Bob, the Rutherford Escort you used for part of the body on this car, why was it left hand drive?
    I am not sure but I believe it possibly was to give more room around the carburetors etc on the R/H side of the engine,one of the problems I had when I ran it in its original body shell form ,was getting enough room for a decent exhaust system on the L/h side of the engne compartment to suit the Lotus Twin Cam engine.I never really noticed the fact that it was L/H drive when I raced it ,it might have been better at Bay Park for seeing the apexes etc ,hard to say as I always went good there anyway

  3. #43
    Thanks Bob, I figured it must have been something like that. I know there were a few OSCA cars in the South Island that were built in lhd, but that was because all the SI tracks are anti-clockwise, not a problem for anyone running the full ShellSport series.

  4. #44
    Couple of neat pics supplied by Warwick Clayton. Too bad we don't have sound-o-vision! I bet the little Escort is screaming.

    Name:  673A.jpg
Views: 1447
Size:  94.2 KB

    Name:  671.jpg
Views: 1332
Size:  82.8 KB

  5. #45
    Thanks Steve ,much appreciated ,please hand on my thanks

  6. #46
    Interesting reading this thread and seeing the photos
    I wonder how much info kiwis had on special saloon cars from the mother land
    there was a low line space frame mk2 escort that raced here built by Derrick Walker
    he called all his cars ladybird 1 2 3 4 and raced late 70's into the early 80's
    he built his own cars and raced Fiat 850 sport 1 litre skoda 2 litre and the escort

  7. #47
    Interesting reading this thread and seeing the photos
    I wonder how much info kiwis had on special saloon cars from the mother land
    there was a low line space frame mk2 escort that raced here built by Derrick Walker
    he called all his cars ladybird 1 2 3 4 and raced late 70's into the early 80's
    he built his own cars and raced Fiat 850 sport 1 litre skoda 2 litre and the escort
    look here for many photos of escorts and UK special saloons in general
    ttp://www.racing70s.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk/racing70s/menus/carlistmenu.htm

    the website is a bit out of date and note been updated the webmaster seems to have changed his email address
    but you will get to see some interesting cars
    another forum to look at is 10 tenths for special saloon threads

  8. #48
    Quote Originally Posted by driftwood View Post
    Interesting reading this thread and seeing the photos
    I wonder how much info kiwis had on special saloon cars from the mother land
    there was a low line space frame mk2 escort that raced here built by Derrick Walker
    he called all his cars ladybird 1 2 3 4 and raced late 70's into the early 80's
    he built his own cars and raced Fiat 850 sport 1 litre skoda 2 litre and the escort
    In my own case there was no outside thinking or influence ,it was a common sense approach to build something that fitted with in the rules we had back then.Actually a lot of the thinking behind that car would have surfaced in a Anglia away back in 68 if All Comers had kept going .I have always been a innovator rather than a copier ,in fact I believe a lot of my thinking andi ideas have predated things which have happened offshore,and that thinking is still being projected into the present times where we are still comimg up with better solutions and resuilts for stuff that has been run "that " way for years overseas

  9. #49
    LOL Bob typical kiwi statement!!!!
    The thing is to read the rule book and see what you can do to stretch the definition and interpret them to what you want to do
    The UK main rules where
    1 wheel base plus minus 1 inch
    2 engine has to remain at same end of the car as originally built
    3 silhouette had to remain the same
    4 car above axle line be the same
    So as time went by the cars evolved from street cars modified to having wide arches big engines light weight panels rolling thru to semi space frame front rear ends to full space frames and then sports car chassis with glass fibre bodies fitted all of
    this happened over a 5-10 year period
    The Germans had Gp2 cars then Gp5 DRM Japan had similar concept as did the Swedes/Fins Ozzies and South Africans all with varying degrees of regulations on mods allowed and budgets plus any manufacturer input

    In theory we could have bought a car from any of these nations to race in UK an they would have been eligible but how competitive remains another matter depending on the year
    I would imagine budgets in NZ where restricted due to being small nation fewer people and high importation duties back then so you had to be self sufficient and build your own cars and motors.
    The likes of you Mick Hill in UK were "pioneers" doing it first and others followed once they had either learnt the mechanical skills or had budgets to build cars to the next level of rules.
    Yes I know Im behind you guys, i like warm beer and it rains a lot here too.

  10. #50

    416B Hart

    Quote Originally Posted by bob homewood View Post
    I brought the engine from Bryce Platt who had ran it in his Escort in 1600cc form at one stage ,before that from what I found out it raced In Australia F2 in a car that Geoff Brabham drove ,but I am open to correction on that one.I used the cylinder head etc in a 1850 cc engine in the Escort for the first season,I then ran a 2litre Alloy block twin cam in it briefly before taking that engine out to convert to a BDA ,this took a lot longer than I intended after getting totally mucked around with a couple of people doing work on it and the motor only finally went back into the Escort for the last couple of club meetings before I parked the car up The season before the BDA went back in ,unbeknown to most people I only ran a 1600cc short stroke Paul England engine I had ,actually the car went surprisingly well with that little engine and still gave a good account of itself, ( I just drove it harder ) that Paul England Engine which had also been a Aussie F2 engine went into my classic Escort TC for awhile ,its now retired to my engine collection.The BDA I have totally rebuilt myself and awaits final assembly
    Hi Bob, If my memory is not too stuffed, I think this engine was ex Steve Millen from the Schollum Bros B29 Chevron. I worked on this car in Asia and NZ. It became surplus after the car was fitted with an ex Ken Smith FVC. I remember fitting the .500" lift cams out under the verandah at the Schollums house in Singapore, with my right foot swelled up like a balloon. Silly Kiwi boys walk on the lawn in bare feet. Great engine right on the limit for its time. Quoted at 210 bhp in 1600 form on Lucas injection.
    Cheers Dave

  11. #51
    Quote Originally Posted by Dave Silcock View Post
    Hi Bob, If my memory is not too stuffed, I think this engine was ex Steve Millen from the Schollum Bros B29 Chevron. I worked on this car in Asia and NZ. It became surplus after the car was fitted with an ex Ken Smith FVC. I remember fitting the .500" lift cams out under the verandah at the Schollums house in Singapore, with my right foot swelled up like a balloon. Silly Kiwi boys walk on the lawn in bare feet. Great engine right on the limit for its time. Quoted at 210 bhp in 1600 form on Lucas injection.
    Cheers Dave
    Thanks Dave In 1850 form the best I saw was 223@8800 on injection,which I believe because the cylinder head flow figures were 225 hp ,that at the end of the day is the limiting factor,and is as you know what honestly governs it ,the larger capacity did however give it a lot more torque and the longer stroke I believe gave it the ability to carry the bigger cams better The biggest gain in torque and tractability we found was when we built and fitted the anti reversion exhaust system to it,it transformed it

  12. #52
    Hi Bob ,interesting about the anti reversion exhaust, as fitted to the Chevron the primary pipes where quite a bit larger than the ports and had a short tapered piece to join the two. In the light of your experience the last thing you would need.
    Cheers Dave.

  13. #53
    Dave,
    Yes I found by running the short stub inside the bigger bigger diameter part of the exhaust with a definate step to be the answer,also choking the tailpipe down with a small transition also helped ,you have to remember this is mid eighties when I did this we do it all the time now ,just built one recently for a single seater with a Lotus TC ,showed a big gain in both torque and power on the dyno

  14. #54
    Do you think you'll get the chance to give the Escort a run this season Bob?

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •